Interactions between malaria parasites infecting the same vertebrate host
- 1 February 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Parasitology
- Vol. 96 (3) , 607-639
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182000080227
Abstract
SUMMARY: Several species of malarial protozoans commonly parasitize the same host population and often the same individual host. This paper reviews the evidence for interactions among such host-sharing parasites. Field studies measuring the cross-sectional prevalence of malarial species often record fewer mixed infections than expected by chance, suggesting that one parasite has excluded another or suppressed its parasitaemia to undetectable levels. Prevalences may vary reciprocally between seasons, with one species increasing in prevalence while another decreases, despite parallel increases in the transmission rates of both, again suggesting suppression of one species by another. However, longitudinal studies of individual hosts indicate that malarial parasites may also favourably affect the host environment for each other, perhaps due to their depressive effect on the immune system: this is shown by the recrudescence of a latent malarial species immediately before or after the parasitic wave of another species. The suppression hypothesis is supported by data derived from the simultaneous inoculation of twoPlasmodiumspecies into laboratory animals; many studies have shown that one or both species are suppressed. This may be mediated by competition for host cells or nutrients, or by heterologous immunity. However, the suppressed species rebounds after the other species has abated, and may show a prolonged infection. Experimental evidence that one species can facilitate the recrudescence of another is minimal, but this may reflect the paucity of investigations of this phenomenon. Laboratory studies show only minor cross-resistance between host-sharing species, which is consistent with the hypothesis that their co-occurrence has led to antigenic divergence or that species showing strong heterologous resistance cannot co-exist in the same host population. Such complementarity occurs not only with the host immune response but also with many other life-history characteristics of host-sharing parasites, such as host cell preference. I conclude that malarial species have been important in each other's evolution, particularly in the tropics where multi-species complexes are common.This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pernicious syndromes in Plasmodium infectionsThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1982
- Chronic malarial infection of mice: a comparison of single and multiple infections with Plasmodium berghei following P. yoeliiTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1978
- The distribution, incidence and general ecology of saurian malaria in Middle AmericaInternational Journal for Parasitology, 1977
- Plasmodium berghei: Accelerated clearance of sporozoites from blood as part of immune-mechanism in miceExperimental Parasitology, 1972
- The course of simultaneously inoculated, concomitant infections with Plasmodium vinckei and Plasmodium berghei in white miceTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1970
- Immunological studies on simian malaria parasites IV. Heterologous superinfection of monkeys with chronic Plasmodium knowlesi infectionsTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1969
- Competitive relationship between Eperythrozoon coccoides and Plasmodium berghei in the mouseExperimental Parasitology, 1965
- REPORT ON A MALARIA SURVEY IN THE SEPIK DISTRICTThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1957
- Sidelights on malaria in man obtained by subinoculation experimentsTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1947
- Latency and long-term relapses in Benign Tertian malariaTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1946